TravisCI is a platform for continuous integration. Homebrew is a package management software (that also runs on the OSX machines that TravisCI provides).
So you can't compare both since both are totally different things. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travis_CI https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_integration https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homebrew_(package_management_software) On 27.09.19 17:28, Peng Yu wrote: > Can I understand in this way? For people who develop wget2, use > TravisCI. For people just want to use wget2, homebrew is better, > provided there is a corresponding formula. > > On 9/27/19, Tim Rühsen <tim.rueh...@gmx.de> wrote: >> Not comparable, TravisCI is a platform for continuous integration. But >> it supports OSX and we build Wget2 on it, using homebrew to install >> dependencies. So anyone making up a homebrew formula might take it as >> quick starter. >> >> On 27.09.19 17:20, Peng Yu wrote: >>> What is the pros and cons of TravisCI vs homebrew? >>> >>> On 9/27/19, Tim Rühsen <tim.rueh...@gmx.de> wrote: >>>> You have to clone the project via >>>> git clone https://gitlab.com/gnuwget/wget2.git >>>> >>>> If it helps, we have TravisCI OSX build rules in .travis_setup.sh and >>>> .travis.sh in the project directory. It uses homebrew to install >>>> dependencies. >>>> >>>> Regards, Tim >>>> >>>> >>>> On 27.09.19 15:50, Peng Yu wrote: >>>>> I don't find wget2 on homebrew. Can anybody make a formula for it? >>>>> >>>>> On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 5:53 AM Tim Rühsen <tim.rueh...@gmx.de >>>>> <mailto:tim.rueh...@gmx.de>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Hi Pen Yu, >>>>> >>>>> --compression=gzip >>>>> >>>>> With Wget2 these compression types are automatically use (if built >>>>> in): >>>>> gzip, deflate, bzip2, xz, lzma, br, zstd, lzip >>>>> >>>>> Regards, Tim >>>>> >>>>> On 27.09.19 05:03, Peng Yu wrote: >>>>> > Hi, >>>>> > >>>>> > curl has the option `--compressed` which will decompress the data >>>>> > automatically. But I don't think wget's option --compression can >>>>> > automatically decompress the data. >>>>> > >>>>> > Is there a way to let wget automatically decompress the data? >>>>> Thanks. >>>>> > >>>>> >>>>> -- >>>>> Regards, >>>>> Peng >>>> >>>> >>> >>> >> >> > >
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature